Louise Leakey: Digging for humanity's origins

80,327 views ・ 2008-07-23

TED


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00:18
Who are we?
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That is the big question.
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And essentially we are just an upright-walking, big-brained,
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super-intelligent ape.
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This could be us.
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We belong to the family called the Hominidae.
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We are the species called Homo sapiens sapiens,
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and it's important to remember that,
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in terms of our place in the world today
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and our future on planet Earth.
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We are one species
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of about five and a half thousand mammalian species
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that exist on planet Earth today.
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And that's just a tiny fraction of all species
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that have ever lived on the planet in past times.
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We're one species out of approximately,
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or let's say, at least 16 upright-walking apes
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that have existed over the past six to eight million years.
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But as far as we know, we're the only upright-walking ape
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that exists on planet Earth today, except for the bonobos.
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And it's important to remember that,
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because the bonobos are so human,
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and they share 99 percent of their genes with us.
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And we share our origins with a handful of the living great apes.
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It's important to remember that we evolved.
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Now, I know that's a dirty word for some people,
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but we evolved from common ancestors
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with the gorillas, the chimpanzee and also the bonobos.
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We have a common past, and we have a common future.
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And it is important to remember that all of these great apes
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have come on as long and as interesting evolutionary journey
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as we ourselves have today.
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And it's this journey that is of such interest to humanity,
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and it's this journey that has been the focus
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of the past three generations of my family,
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as we've been in East Africa looking for the fossil remains
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of our ancestors to try and piece together our evolutionary past.
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And this is how we look for them.
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A group of dedicated young men and women walk very slowly
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out across vast areas of Africa,
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looking for small fragments of bone, fossil bone, that may be on the surface.
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And that's an example of what we may do as we walk across
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the landscape in Northern Kenya, looking for fossils.
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I doubt many of you in the audience can see
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the fossil that's in this picture,
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but if you look very carefully, there is a jaw, a lower jaw,
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of a 4.1-million-year-old upright-walking ape
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as it was found at Lake Turkana on the west side.
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(Laughter)
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It's extremely time-consuming, labor-intensive
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and it is something that is going to involve a lot more people,
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to begin to piece together our past.
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We still really haven't got a very complete picture of it.
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When we find a fossil, we mark it.
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Today, we've got great technology: we have GPS.
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We mark it with a GPS fix,
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and we also take a digital photograph of the specimen,
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so we could essentially put it back on the surface,
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exactly where we found it.
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And we can bring all this information into big GIS packages, today.
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When we then find something very important,
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like the bones of a human ancestor,
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we begin to excavate it extremely carefully and slowly,
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using dental picks and fine paintbrushes.
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And all the sediment is then put through these screens,
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and where we go again through it very carefully,
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looking for small bone fragments, and it's then washed.
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And these things are so exciting. They are so often the only,
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or the very first time that anybody has ever seen the remains.
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And here's a very special moment, when my mother and myself
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were digging up some remains of human ancestors.
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And it is one of the most special things
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to ever do with your mother.
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(Laughter)
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Not many people can say that.
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But now, let me take you back to Africa, two million years ago.
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I'd just like to point out, if you look at the map of Africa,
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it does actually look like a hominid skull in its shape.
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Now we're going to go to the East African and the Rift Valley.
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It essentially runs up from the Gulf of Aden,
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or runs down to Lake Malawi.
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And the Rift Valley is a depression.
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It's a basin, and rivers flow down from the highlands into the basin,
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carrying sediment, preserving the bones of animals that lived there.
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If you want to become a fossil, you actually need to die somewhere
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where your bones will be rapidly buried.
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You then hope that the earth moves in such a way
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as to bring the bones back up to the surface.
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And then you hope that one of us lot
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will walk around and find small pieces of you.
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(Laughter)
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OK, so it is absolutely surprising that we know as much
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as we do know today about our ancestors,
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because it's incredibly difficult,
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A, for these things to become -- to be -- preserved,
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and secondly, for them to have been brought back up to the surface.
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And we really have only spent 50 years looking for these remains,
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and begin to actually piece together our evolutionary story.
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So, let's go to Lake Turkana, which is one such lake basin
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in the very north of our country, Kenya.
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And if you look north here, there's a big river that flows into the lake
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that's been carrying sediment and preserving the remains
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of the animals that lived there.
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Fossil sites run up and down both lengths of that lake basin,
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which represents some 20,000 square miles.
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That's a huge job that we've got on our hands.
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Two million years ago at Lake Turkana,
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Homo erectus, one of our human ancestors,
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actually lived in this region.
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You can see some of the major fossil sites that we've been working
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in the north. But, essentially, two million years ago,
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Homo erectus, up in the far right corner,
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lived alongside three other species of human ancestor.
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And here is a skull of a Homo erectus,
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which I just pulled off the shelf there.
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(Laughter)
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But it is not to say that being a single species on planet Earth is the norm.
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In fact, if you go back in time,
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it is the norm that there are multiple species of hominids
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or of human ancestors that coexist at any one time.
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Where did these things come from?
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That's what we're still trying to find answers to,
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and it is important to realize that there is diversity
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in all different species, and our ancestors are no exception.
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Here's some reconstructions of some of the fossils
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that have been found from Lake Turkana.
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But I was very lucky to have been brought up in Kenya,
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essentially accompanying my parents to Lake Turkana
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in search of human remains.
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And we were able to dig up, when we got old enough,
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fossils such as this, a slender-snouted crocodile.
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And we dug up giant tortoises, and elephants and things like that.
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But when I was 12, as I was in this picture,
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a very exciting expedition was in place on the west side,
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when they found essentially the skeleton of this Homo erectus.
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I could relate to this Homo erectus skeleton very well,
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because I was the same age that he was when he died.
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And I imagined him to be tall, dark-skinned.
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His brothers certainly were able to run long distances
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chasing prey, probably sweating heavily as they did so.
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He was very able to use stones effectively as tools.
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And this individual himself, this one that I'm holding up here,
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actually had a bad back. He'd probably had an injury as a child.
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He had a scoliosis and therefore must have been looked after
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quite carefully by other female, and probably much smaller,
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members of his family group, to have got to where he did in life, age 12.
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Unfortunately for him, he fell into a swamp
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and couldn't get out.
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Essentially, his bones were rapidly buried
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and beautifully preserved.
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And he remained there until 1.6 million years later,
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when this very famous fossil hunter, Kamoya Kimeu,
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walked along a small hillside
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and found that small piece of his skull lying on the surface
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amongst the pebbles, recognized it as being hominid.
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It's actually this little piece up here on the top.
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Well, an excavation was begun immediately,
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and more and more little bits of skull
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started to be extracted from the sediment.
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And what was so fun about it was this:
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the skull pieces got closer and closer to the roots of the tree,
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and fairly recently the tree had grown up,
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but it had found that the skull had captured nice water in the hillside,
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and so it had decided to grow its roots in and around this,
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holding it in place and preventing it from washing away down the slope.
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We began to find limb bones; we found finger bones,
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the bones of the pelvis, vertebrae, ribs, the collar bones,
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things that had never, ever been seen before in Homo erectus.
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It was truly exciting.
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He had a body very similar to our own,
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and he was on the threshold of becoming human.
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Well, shortly afterwards, members of his species
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started to move northwards out of Africa,
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and you start to see fossils of Homo erectus
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in Georgia, China and also in parts of Indonesia.
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So, Homo erectus was the first human ancestor to leave Africa
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and begin its spread across the globe.
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Some exciting finds, again, as I mentioned,
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from Dmanisi, in the Republic of Georgia.
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But also, surprising finds
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recently announced from the Island of Flores in Indonesia,
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where a group of these human ancestors have been isolated,
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and have become dwarfed, and they're only about a meter in height.
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But they lived only 18,000 years ago,
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and that is truly extraordinary to think about.
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Just to put this in terms of generations,
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because people do find it hard to think of time,
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Homo erectus left Africa 90,000 generations ago.
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We evolved essentially from an African stock.
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Again, at about 200,000 years as a fully-fledged us.
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And we only left Africa about 70,000 years ago.
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And until 30,000 years ago, at least three upright-walking apes
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shared the planet Earth.
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The question now is, well, who are we?
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We're certainly a polluting, wasteful, aggressive species,
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with a few nice things thrown in, perhaps.
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(Laughter)
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For the most part, we're not particularly pleasant at all.
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We have a much larger brain than our ape ancestors.
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Is this a good evolutionary adaptation, or is it going to lead us
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to being the shortest-lived hominid species on planet Earth?
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And what is it that really makes us us?
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I think it's our collective intelligence.
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It's our ability to write things down,
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our language and our consciousness.
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From very primitive beginnings, with a very crude tool kit of stones,
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we now have a very advanced tool kit, and our tool use
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has really reached unprecedented levels:
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we've got buggies to Mars; we've mapped the human genome;
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and recently even created synthetic life, thanks to Craig Venter.
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And we've also managed to communicate with people
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all over the world, from extraordinary places.
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Even from within an excavation in northern Kenya,
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we can talk to people about what we're doing.
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As Al Gore so clearly has reminded us,
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we have reached extraordinary numbers
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of people on this planet.
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Human ancestors really only survive on planet Earth,
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if you look at the fossil record,
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for about, on average, a million years at a time.
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We've only been around for the past 200,000 years as a species,
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yet we've reached a population of more than six and a half billion people.
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And last year, our population grew by 80 million.
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I mean, these are extraordinary numbers.
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You can see here, again, taken from Al Gore's book.
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But what's happened is our technology
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has removed the checks and balances on our population growth.
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We have to control our numbers, and I think this is as important
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as anything else that's being done in the world today.
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But we have to control our numbers,
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because we can't really hold it together as a species.
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My father so appropriately put it,
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that "We are certainly the only animal that makes conscious choices
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that are bad for our survival as a species."
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Can we hold it together?
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It's important to remember that we all evolved in Africa.
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We all have an African origin.
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We have a common past and we share a common future.
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Evolutionarily speaking, we're just a blip.
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We're sitting on the edge of a precipice,
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and we have the tools and the technology at our hands
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to communicate what needs to be done
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to hold it together today.
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We could tell every single human being out there, if we really wanted to.
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But will we do that, or will we just let nature take its course?
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Well, to end on a very positive note,
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I think evolutionarily speaking,
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this is probably a fairly good thing, in the end.
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I'll leave it at that, thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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